It's interesting, since I posted in this thread three(!) years ago, Georgia has become a hot bed of filming for both TV and film. The little signs directing cast and crew to shooting locations have popped up all over the city. Just this month, there are 20+ filming across the state (mostly in the Atlanta area).
Of course the quality varies from the high-end (Rectify, Walking Dead, Hunger Games trilogy) to the bottom of the barrel (Ride Along 2, Real Housewives)

Piping in from the deep south Bible belt (Metro Atlanta).
Interestingly, our church is having a movie night Wednesday, and members can choose either God's Not Dead or Heaven is For Real. I'd be interested to see what the split is (though I know several have already seen God's Not Dead). And I received about four of those text messages before I found out from here that it was directly tied to the movie. I assumed it was just enthusiasm about the film or general "lift you up" texts that we sometimes send out to friends or our small group.
To our pastor's credit, we did the same with Noah, though the overwhelming response I heard from the people who went was they didn't like it. Only a small handful appreciated it for what it was, even if they didn't love it (thankfully including our pastor).
Myself? I missed Noah and will miss this week's events due to obligations at my daughter's school. I'll eventually get to see Noah. I doubt I make time GND.

What's interesting to me is seeing this process here in Atlanta while watching a (heavily) fictionalized version of the development process in regional theater on "Smash." It's not a great TV show by any stretch, but it is interesting how a play slowly comes together through workshops, regional runs, rewrites, etc.

The show is ending its premiere run in Atlanta, but I unfortunately have not been able to make it.
Fittingly, the local Atlanta critic raves, while the NY Times critic thinks the show needs the heavy hand of an editor to streamline it. Both reviews praise the musical direction of T Bone Burnett.
Atlanta: "Ghost Brothers of Darkland County" a musical horror story that twists and turns
NY: "These Ghosts Are Singing With a Southern Twang"
No word yet on if the producers will try to push this on to NY, continue to refine it or drop it.

I'm amazed at what my 3-year old daughter likes. She LOVES Sound of Music, especially "Do Re Mi" and "Favorite Things." Both of which she can nearly sing better than me. She's also a big fan of marching bands (thanks to both her parents having been band geeks all the way through college).
She also likes the typical kids CDs - Bible songs, nursery rhymes, traditional kids songs (wheels on the bus, etc.).

Addison (age 3 tomorrow) on a walk this morning:
"I like lady bugs, but I don't like real bugs"
"Mommy says I can do (insert a long list of things she wants to do) when I'm a big girl. I'll be a big girl when I'm 6"
"I have rocks in my nose" (they were boogers)

I think season 3 will be a great one. I like that even though Mags is gone, the hole left by her exit is being filled by competing interests - both local and imported. Raylan's going to have his hands full.

I sure hope that's the case for my Georgia Dawgs. Two games against top 15 (preseason) teams. Two losses (one substantial, one a tight heartbreaker).
Now, there should be no more cobwebs. Let's go 10-2 (tongue firmly in cheek).

Got dragged to The Change Up last weekend. The movie was in Jason Bateman's terms, "crap," but I did have fun playing sightseeing across Atlanta:
Georgia Aquarium
Turner Field,
Ecco (restaurant)
Abattoir (restaurant)
Lenox Mall
Various shots of downtown skyline.
Still not worth sitting through, though.

As the parent of a toddler, I can second the notion that Blue's Clues is the more popular show in our house. Our daughter doesn't pay as much attention to Sesame Street, but she will sit and watch Blues Clues all the way through (talking to it the whole time).
I personally have fond memories of SS, though. I loved it then and still enjoy it when it's on.

Album's out today, and their website has five songs from the album streaming as a preview: B2C Music Player.
On a quick listen, they don't seem to have dropped a beat from the late 90's. Good mix of upbeat, Mediterranean influenced songs with folk-tinged ballads. Will need to take time to see of the lyrics have matured, though. As much as I loved "Anybody Out There" as a teen, I listened to it recently and cringed at some of the obvious CCM-type lyrics.

Fun topic.
There's a scene in We Are Marshall that was filmed at a gas station up the street from my house. It's the gas station when the assistant coaches were driving home, pull into a gas station and first hear about the accident. We actually saw the filming while driving to visit my parents that day.
And one of the opening scenes in AMC's The Walking Dead struck home. I used to work in the building which served as the hospital Rick wakes up from in the opening scenes (and it used to be a hospital, so it worked well).
And my hometown (as well as several of the small town squares around the area) were used in Smokey and the Bandit and The Heat of the Night.